As the world mourns Muhammad Ali, who has died today, we look back through the Herald archives to celebrate his legendary achievements. In 1979, Ali made a visit to New Zealand and made a strong impression on a young Lance Revill.
The crowd at Western Springs on February 25, 1979, were steamed up. They had packed into the Auckland stadium baying for a fight, but so far Muhammad Ali had failed to show his legendary heavyweight might against his opponents, fellow champs Jimmy Ellis and Joe Bugner.
"He was pitter-patter with them and they weren't even hitting him," says Lance Revill, who was sitting 12 rows back in the stands with his father.
The Ali roadshow had been greeted with feverish excitement when it hit our shores. Boys shadow boxed with Ali on Auckland's street, cars screeched to a halt and elderly women stopped to shake his hand.
Revill was 25. He had boxing experience, winning bronze at the Commonwealth Games five years earlier in the light middleweight division, but was taking a break from fighting at the time. That did not stop him forking out to see his idol at a special dinner and the following night at the stadium show. "I was quite in awe," says Revill.